![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I had a nasty land-out the other day, hit heavy sink while deep in the
mountains east of Williams, Ca. I lost 2500 feet in no time and found myself below the mountain tops. Went to the 'Alternates' page on my trusty SN-10 only to find I wasn't within gliding distance of any listed alternates. I ran east following a canyon that lead to the totally unlandable terrain east of Red Bluff. Down, down ,down I sank maintaining about 1000 feet above the slope as I looked at nothing but trees! Finally I flew over a small pasture that looked to be landable. It had all my favorite attributes, short, bumpy, fenced, up hill with trees on the approach end, but at the time, it looked lovely. Popped the gear and turned down-wind at what looked to be about 800 feet, pulled full spoiler just before the trees and cleared them by a good 10 feet. Flared with half spoiler and rolled about 10 feet when I hit a mound that put the nose down hard (Genesis 2). I heard something pop and then we were flying again. Pulled full spoiler and touched down again and slid to a stop about 100 feet short of the fence. WOW, glad that's over! A few days later I checked my trace and found I was within easy gliding distance of an airport (Ruth, Ca) when I hit all that sink. Why didn't the SN-10 direct me to Ruth? Reading the manual, on page 21 it says; The 'A' attribute does not cause a point to appear in the list of landable fields on the alternates page! Only points marked with an 'L' for landable will be shown. Ruth was marked with an 'A' only. Checking the local data bases I find Montague, Air Sailing, Logan, Avenal, Hobbs and Parowan are all using 'A' without the 'L' for landable airports. Recommend everyone check to make sure the data base you are using with the SN-10 has airports identified with an 'L' for landable attribure. Cheers, JJ PS;The pop I heard on landing was a shear pin that fails when heavy loads are placed on the nose wheel thereby preventing retraction loads from being applied to the main gear. An easy fix after I located the shear pin which is deep inside the nose wheel -well. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sep 28, 2:02*pm, JJ Sinclair wrote:
I had a nasty land-out the other day, hit heavy sink while deep in the mountains east of Williams, Ca. I lost 2500 feet in no time and found myself below the mountain tops. Went to the 'Alternates' page on my trusty SN-10 only to find I wasn't within gliding distance of any listed alternates. I ran east following a canyon that lead to the totally unlandable terrain east of Red Bluff. Down, down ,down I sank maintaining about 1000 feet above the slope as I looked at nothing but trees! Finally I flew over a small pasture that looked to be landable. It had all my favorite attributes, short, bumpy, fenced, up hill with trees on the approach end, but at the time, it looked lovely. Popped the gear and turned down-wind at what looked to be about 800 feet, pulled full spoiler just before the trees and cleared them by a good 10 feet. Flared with half spoiler and rolled about 10 feet when I hit a mound that put the nose down hard (Genesis 2). I heard something pop and then we were flying again. Pulled full spoiler and touched down again and slid to a stop about 100 feet short of the fence. WOW, glad that's over! A few days later I checked my trace and found I was within easy gliding distance of an airport (Ruth, Ca) when I hit all that sink. Why didn't the SN-10 direct me to Ruth? Reading the manual, on page 21 it says; The 'A' attribute does not cause a point to appear in the list of landable fields on the alternates page! Only points marked with an 'L' for landable will be shown. Ruth was marked with an 'A' only. Checking the local data bases I find Montague, Air Sailing, Logan, Avenal, Hobbs and Parowan are all using *'A' without the 'L' for landable airports. Recommend everyone check to make sure the data base you are using with the SN-10 has airports identified with an 'L' for landable attribure. Cheers, JJ PS;The pop I heard on landing was a shear pin that fails when heavy loads are placed on the nose wheel thereby preventing retraction loads from being applied to the main gear. An easy fix after I located the shear pin which is deep inside the nose wheel -well. RTFM, JJ! Seriously, glad it was an easy fix - for both you and the glider. By the way, that's why I have a PDA (SYM) in addition to my SN10 - All my PDA shows is the task and landable airports, so I don't have to do any page swapping when it starts to get sweaty... Of course, the requirement to QC the database still applies. Cheers, Kirk 66 |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sep 28, 5:02*pm, JJ Sinclair wrote:
I had a nasty land-out the other day, hit heavy sink while deep in the mountains east of Williams, Ca. I lost 2500 feet in no time and found myself below the mountain tops. Went to the 'Alternates' page on my trusty SN-10 only to find I wasn't within gliding distance of any listed alternates. I ran east following a canyon that lead to the totally unlandable terrain east of Red Bluff. Down, down ,down I sank maintaining about 1000 feet above the slope as I looked at nothing but trees! Finally I flew over a small pasture that looked to be landable. It had all my favorite attributes, short, bumpy, fenced, up hill with trees on the approach end, but at the time, it looked lovely. Popped the gear and turned down-wind at what looked to be about 800 feet, pulled full spoiler just before the trees and cleared them by a good 10 feet. Flared with half spoiler and rolled about 10 feet when I hit a mound that put the nose down hard (Genesis 2). I heard something pop and then we were flying again. Pulled full spoiler and touched down again and slid to a stop about 100 feet short of the fence. WOW, glad that's over! A few days later I checked my trace and found I was within easy gliding distance of an airport (Ruth, Ca) when I hit all that sink. Why didn't the SN-10 direct me to Ruth? Reading the manual, on page 21 it says; The 'A' attribute does not cause a point to appear in the list of landable fields on the alternates page! Only points marked with an 'L' for landable will be shown. Ruth was marked with an 'A' only. Checking the local data bases I find Montague, Air Sailing, Logan, Avenal, Hobbs and Parowan are all using *'A' without the 'L' for landable airports. Recommend everyone check to make sure the data base you are using with the SN-10 has airports identified with an 'L' for landable attribure. Cheers, JJ PS;The pop I heard on landing was a shear pin that fails when heavy loads are placed on the nose wheel thereby preventing retraction loads from being applied to the main gear. An easy fix after I located the shear pin which is deep inside the nose wheel -well. The "L" attribute is normally set by default for airports in the databases I've seen - something funny is going on here. HOWEVER: "L" is separate from "A" because: - not all airports are landable, certainly not in larger-span gliders, and - other non-airport points in the DB can be landable. You do need to check any database you load - whether into an SN10, a PDA, or an electronic-picture-frame... There are often errors in "official" databases. Locally we have a listed airport that hasn't existed for a decade. Bad news if you final-glide to this one. Be careful out there, Best Regards, Dave "YO electric" |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sep 28, 4:01*pm, Dave Nadler wrote:
On Sep 28, 5:02*pm, JJ Sinclair wrote: I had a nasty land-out the other day, hit heavy sink while deep in the mountains east of Williams, Ca. I lost 2500 feet in no time and found myself below the mountain tops. Went to the 'Alternates' page on my trusty SN-10 only to find I wasn't within gliding distance of any listed alternates. I ran east following a canyon that lead to the totally unlandable terrain east of Red Bluff. Down, down ,down I sank maintaining about 1000 feet above the slope as I looked at nothing but trees! Finally I flew over a small pasture that looked to be landable. It had all my favorite attributes, short, bumpy, fenced, up hill with trees on the approach end, but at the time, it looked lovely. Popped the gear and turned down-wind at what looked to be about 800 feet, pulled full spoiler just before the trees and cleared them by a good 10 feet. Flared with half spoiler and rolled about 10 feet when I hit a mound that put the nose down hard (Genesis 2). I heard something pop and then we were flying again. Pulled full spoiler and touched down again and slid to a stop about 100 feet short of the fence. WOW, glad that's over! A few days later I checked my trace and found I was within easy gliding distance of an airport (Ruth, Ca) when I hit all that sink. Why didn't the SN-10 direct me to Ruth? Reading the manual, on page 21 it says; The 'A' attribute does not cause a point to appear in the list of landable fields on the alternates page! Only points marked with an 'L' for landable will be shown. Ruth was marked with an 'A' only. Checking the local data bases I find Montague, Air Sailing, Logan, Avenal, Hobbs and Parowan are all using *'A' without the 'L' for landable airports. Recommend everyone check to make sure the data base you are using with the SN-10 has airports identified with an 'L' for landable attribure. Cheers, JJ PS;The pop I heard on landing was a shear pin that fails when heavy loads are placed on the nose wheel thereby preventing retraction loads from being applied to the main gear. An easy fix after I located the shear pin which is deep inside the nose wheel -well. The "L" attribute is normally set by default for airports in the databases I've seen - something funny is going on here. HOWEVER: "L" is separate from "A" because: - not all airports are landable, certainly not in larger-span gliders, and - other non-airport points in the DB can be landable. You do need to check any database you load - whether into an SN10, a PDA, or an electronic-picture-frame... There are often errors in "official" databases. Locally we have a listed airport that hasn't existed for a decade. Bad news if you final-glide to this one. Be careful out there, Best Regards, Dave "YO electric" I never fly anywhere without knowing beforehand the location of enough landable fields or strips - a habit that goes way back before flight computers and PDAs. I guess flying a ship than can be cheerfully ground-looped without breaking the tail off gives you a wider selection of non-landable fields! Mike |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The 'A' attribute does not cause a point to appear in the
list of landable fields on the alternates page! Only points marked with an 'L' for landable will be shown. If true that seems like an really bad design. When you are low you need a friendly gps with answers, not a bunch of constraints. It sounds like the SN-10 is not very useful without also having PDA and moving map. Chris |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sep 28, 4:01*pm, Dave Nadler wrote:
On Sep 28, 5:02*pm, JJ Sinclair wrote: I had a nasty land-out the other day, hit heavy sink while deep in the mountains east of Williams, Ca. I lost 2500 feet in no time and found myself below the mountain tops. Went to the 'Alternates' page on my trusty SN-10 only to find I wasn't within gliding distance of any listed alternates. I ran east following a canyon that lead to the totally unlandable terrain east of Red Bluff. Down, down ,down I sank maintaining about 1000 feet above the slope as I looked at nothing but trees! Finally I flew over a small pasture that looked to be landable. It had all my favorite attributes, short, bumpy, fenced, up hill with trees on the approach end, but at the time, it looked lovely. Popped the gear and turned down-wind at what looked to be about 800 feet, pulled full spoiler just before the trees and cleared them by a good 10 feet. Flared with half spoiler and rolled about 10 feet when I hit a mound that put the nose down hard (Genesis 2). I heard something pop and then we were flying again. Pulled full spoiler and touched down again and slid to a stop about 100 feet short of the fence. WOW, glad that's over! A few days later I checked my trace and found I was within easy gliding distance of an airport (Ruth, Ca) when I hit all that sink. Why didn't the SN-10 direct me to Ruth? Reading the manual, on page 21 it says; The 'A' attribute does not cause a point to appear in the list of landable fields on the alternates page! Only points marked with an 'L' for landable will be shown. Ruth was marked with an 'A' only. Checking the local data bases I find Montague, Air Sailing, Logan, Avenal, Hobbs and Parowan are all using *'A' without the 'L' for landable airports. Recommend everyone check to make sure the data base you are using with the SN-10 has airports identified with an 'L' for landable attribure. Cheers, JJ PS;The pop I heard on landing was a shear pin that fails when heavy loads are placed on the nose wheel thereby preventing retraction loads from being applied to the main gear. An easy fix after I located the shear pin which is deep inside the nose wheel -well. The "L" attribute is normally set by default for airports in the databases I've seen - something funny is going on here. HOWEVER: "L" is separate from "A" because: - not all airports are landable, certainly not in larger-span gliders, and - other non-airport points in the DB can be landable. You do need to check any database you load - whether into an SN10, a PDA, or an electronic-picture-frame... There are often errors in "official" databases. Locally we have a listed airport that hasn't existed for a decade. Bad news if you final-glide to this one. Be careful out there, Best Regards, Dave "YO electric" Dave - Good luck trying to convince people this was a good decision. It just appears to be contrary to how others interpret the meaning of "L" and "A". This is not how I believe all Cambridge products have used an "L" and "A" attributes, certainly not the C302/303 and I think older Cambridge devices. With Cambridge effectively defining the standard for this why was if felt necessary to use the reverse interpretation that "A" does not imply "L"? But JJ - the waypoint file for Williams on the Soaring Turnpoint Exchange for the SN10 *does* have Ruth marked with an "L" attribute. So why did it not show up for you? If you have been hand-editing the file and removing the "L" or not working with the Turnpoint Exchange SN10 file as a starting point then ya kinda burnt yourself (even if the behavior is a bad design decision) This can be one "interesting" area of the Mendocinos where we can be flying in not over the mountains. Darryl |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sep 28, 2:02*pm, JJ Sinclair wrote:
I had a nasty land-out the other day, hit heavy sink while deep in the mountains east of Williams, Ca. I lost 2500 feet in no time and found myself below the mountain tops. Went to the 'Alternates' page on my trusty SN-10 only to find I wasn't within gliding distance of any listed alternates. I ran east following a canyon that lead to the totally unlandable terrain east of Red Bluff. Down, down ,down I sank maintaining about 1000 feet above the slope as I looked at nothing but trees! Finally I flew over a small pasture that looked to be landable. It had all my favorite attributes, short, bumpy, fenced, up hill with trees on the approach end, but at the time, it looked lovely. Popped the gear and turned down-wind at what looked to be about 800 feet, pulled full spoiler just before the trees and cleared them by a good 10 feet. Flared with half spoiler and rolled about 10 feet when I hit a mound that put the nose down hard (Genesis 2). I heard something pop and then we were flying again. Pulled full spoiler and touched down again and slid to a stop about 100 feet short of the fence. WOW, glad that's over! A few days later I checked my trace and found I was within easy gliding distance of an airport (Ruth, Ca) when I hit all that sink. Why didn't the SN-10 direct me to Ruth? Reading the manual, on page 21 it says; The 'A' attribute does not cause a point to appear in the list of landable fields on the alternates page! Only points marked with an 'L' for landable will be shown. Ruth was marked with an 'A' only. Checking the local data bases I find Montague, Air Sailing, Logan, Avenal, Hobbs and Parowan are all using *'A' without the 'L' for landable airports. Recommend everyone check to make sure the data base you are using with the SN-10 has airports identified with an 'L' for landable attribure. Cheers, JJ PS;The pop I heard on landing was a shear pin that fails when heavy loads are placed on the nose wheel thereby preventing retraction loads from being applied to the main gear. An easy fix after I located the shear pin which is deep inside the nose wheel -well. Yikes! That sounds like a lot of sink! Glad it turned out. Goes to show that even multiple thousands of flying hours won't necessarily show you the worst of what mother nature is capable of dishing out and even careful prep won't always protect you from technical snafus that can put you in a pickle. Best to have a Plan C in case Plan B doesn't work out...in Case Plan A doesn't work out. I think Dave meant if an airport is landable it should have both an L and an A attribute. I assume the turnpoint exchange does the right thing for each format/computer. The problem is most likely with the originator of the waypoint file. 9B |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]() But JJ - the waypoint file for Williams on the Soaring Turnpoint Exchange for the SN10 *does* have Ruth marked with an "L" attribute. So why did it not show up for you? If you have been hand-editing the file and removing the "L" or not working with the Turnpoint Exchange SN10 file as a starting point then ya kinda burnt yourself (even if the behavior is a bad design decision) Yeah, I didn't like the Williams file, so I made up my own where an airport is given an 'A' designator. That tells me to be looking for a large complex as apposed to something with an 'L' which might be a duster strip that looks more like a road. All (most) of these files are based on Cambride where an A or L will do the same thing.............see my proposed new Williams file where every possible landing spot is given a big 'L'. Cheers, JJ |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Oops, I stand corrected the world-wide turnpoint exchange does show an
'L' for airports when downloading Ilec files. I was looking at my Cambridge file for the local turnpoints. So there is no problem if one uses the files from the turnpoint exchange, but keep this in mind when making your own files. Sorry, JJ |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Thanks for the "heads up" JJ -- Hartley Falbaum USA "KF" "JJ Sinclair" wrote in message ... Oops, I stand corrected the world-wide turnpoint exchange does show an 'L' for airports when downloading Ilec files. I was looking at my Cambridge file for the local turnpoints. So there is no problem if one uses the files from the turnpoint exchange, but keep this in mind when making your own files. Sorry, JJ |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
GA User fees | Jose | Piloting | 48 | December 24th 05 02:12 AM |
User Charges | Chris | Piloting | 3 | October 8th 05 11:13 PM |
ATC User Fees | Larry Dighera | Piloting | 80 | May 12th 05 07:20 AM |
User Fees | Dude | Owning | 36 | March 19th 05 05:57 PM |
New Lak-12 user group | Chris Davison | Soaring | 0 | January 16th 05 05:55 PM |